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How Your Podcast Builds Trust Before You Ever Speak to a Prospect

How Your Podcast Builds Trust Before You Ever Speak to a Prospect

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A podcast does not need millions of downloads to become a valuable business asset.Josh Hugo launched Leadership Limbo while building his leadership consultancy. The goal was not immediate monetization. It was to create visibility, demonstrate expertise, sharpen his thinking, and give potential clients something meaningful to explore before deciding whether to work with him.In this conversation, Josh explains how the podcast has become part of his business-development process, helped create an unexpected partnership opportunity, and given him a laboratory for testing and refining his ideas.We also discuss why listening back to your own episodes can make you a better interviewer, facilitator, consultant, and communicator—and why podcasters who are motivated only by leads, money, or follower counts often struggle to continue.In this episode: Why Josh started a podcast alongside his consultancy How podcast content establishes credibility with prospective clients Why a podcast can be valuable before it generates direct revenue How existing episodes support sales and nurturing conversations The partnership opportunity that emerged from Josh’s content library Why Josh views the podcast as a laboratory for new ideas What podcasters can learn by listening to themselves The benefits and challenges of having a co-host Why you need a meaningful reason to keep publishing Josh Hugo is the founder of Peak Strategy and co-host of Leadership Limbo, a podcast exploring leadership development, management, and organizational culture.The Founder Podcast Lab explores how founders and business owners can turn their podcasts into practical business assets—building trust, strengthening relationships, clarifying ideas, and creating opportunities.Show NotesA Podcast Can Establish Credibility Before the First ConversationWhen Josh relaunched his consulting practice with a clearer focus on leadership development and team culture, he knew that professional experience alone would not answer every prospect’s question.Potential clients could see his background, but they also needed a way to understand how he thought.That led Josh to begin writing and to co-create Leadership Limbo. The podcast became a public body of work that prospective clients could use to evaluate his ideas, expertise, and seriousness.As Josh explains, people increasingly investigate what someone produces before deciding whether that person is credible. A podcast gives them more than a résumé or service page. It lets them hear how the person thinks.Visibility and Legitimacy Came Before MonetizationJosh and his co-host did not launch the show primarily to sell advertisements or immediately generate revenue.The podcast began as a creative and educational platform that could: Give listeners useful leadership ideas Increase visibility for both hosts Demonstrate their perspectives Provide evidence of their expertise Potentially support lead generation over time That distinction helped them evaluate the podcast by more than download numbers alone.The Content Created an Unexpected Business OpportunityA networking conversation at a conference led Josh to meet a company that provides short-form learning content inside organizations.Neither side entered the conversation looking for a podcast partnership. However, Josh already had dozens of episodes and a significant library of leadership content.Because the podcast was recorded in video as well as audio, portions of that existing content could potentially be adapted for the company’s learning platform.The opportunity did not require Josh to create a podcast from scratch for the partnership. The asset already existed.The Podcast Became a Sales and Nurturing ResourceJosh now uses relevant episodes throughout his marketing and sales process.Instead of creating a new explanation every time someone asks about a leadership topic, he can send: A full episode A specific clip A related article A deeper conversation on the subject The podcast gives prospects additional ways to engage with his thinking between conversations.It also sends a subtle credibility signal. A consistent catalog shows that the consultant has invested time in developing, articulating, and publishing ideas.Podcasting as a Laboratory for Better IdeasOne of the most valuable outcomes was not part of Josh’s original plan.While building his consultancy, much of his time shifted from delivering client work to developing the business. The podcast gave him a regular place to continue practicing his craft.He describes it as a laboratory where he can: Test new ideas Clarify his thinking Synthesize complex concepts Practice communicating leadership principles Stay prepared to deliver value to clients The podcast improved more than his podcasting ability. It helped him refine his professional expertise.Listening Back Creates a Powerful Feedback LoopJosh also recommends regularly listening to your...
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